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An approaching front is generating storms in SW WA, some intense. Rain & a few storms are scattering across southwest QLD, western NSW & VIC in humid unstable air. Showers are along the eastern seaboard in persistent, moist easterly winds. A high is keeping the remainder dry.

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Min

Max

Late ShowerSydneyNSW

16.4°C

15°C
22°C

ThunderstormsMelbourneVIC

14.4°C

12°C
18°C

Mostly SunnyBrisbaneQLD

18.6°C

16°C
24°C

Possible ThunderstormPerthWA

22.2°C

17°C
25°C

Mostly SunnyAdelaideSA

13.5°C

9°C
22°C

Late ShowerCanberraACT

9.3°C

8°C
17°C

RainHobartTAS

12.6°C

11°C
15°C

Mostly SunnyDarwinNT

28.1°C

24°C
34°C

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Today, 9:46AM UTC

Tornado tears through Bunbury as severe thunderstorms continue in southwest WA

On Thursday we wrote about severe thunderstorms forecast to impact southwest WA today: Severe thunderstorms to hit WA on Friday. Severe thunderstorms started hitting the Margaret River and Busselton areas in the early afternoon, reaching Bunbury around 4pm where a tornado tore through the town. The tornado caused extensive damage, causing thousands of homes to lose power and destroying a PCYC building with dozens of young people injured inside. Tornado rips through Bunbury, two people rushed to hospital - ABC News Image: Himawari-9 satellite, WZ lightning and BOM radar at 4pm WST The doppler velocity radar imagery (on the right) from 4pm WST seems to suggest rotation consistent with the damage and video footage of a tornado. The green indicates winds moving to the north, while red is moving to the south, potentially indicating rotation. The reflectivity imagery (on the left) shows strong precipitation cores.   Image: Radar reflectivity left, doppler velocity right. Source: radarscope (DTN, BOM) These thunderstorms have been triggered by a trough ahead of a cold front that can be seen in the MSLP chart below. Cool season thunderstorms like these in southern Australia don’t have as much buoyant energy as summer thunderstorms but the wind shear makes up for it. Wind shear is the change in wind speed and direction with height. Wind shear is a key ingredient for making storms severe. These types of systems are the most common types to produce southern Australia’s tornados including for southwest WA. Image: BOM MSLP chart at 2pm WST Severe storms are ongoing and will continue into the evening. Keep up to date with the latest warnings here: Western Australia Warnings Summary (bom.gov.au)  

Today, 4:25AM UTC

Watch Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre filling over past five weeks

Floodwaters have been filling Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre over the past few weeks, putting on a spectacular show that can be seen from space. Water from rain that fell over Qld earlier this year has been slowly flowing into Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre since March. The movement of water through this vast ephemeral lake (meaning it only fills after substantial rain) is slow due to the flatness of the landscape in central Australia. This is why it took about one month for the water to travel 115 km across the north lake of Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre. The satellite images below show the difference between March 17 and May 6, 2024. In mid-March, water was just starting to enter the northern part of Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre’s north lake. By early May, this tongue of water had spread more than 100 km through the huge lake towards Belt Bay. Images: Enhanced satellite images showing Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre on March 17 and May 6, 2024. Source: SentinelHub The time-lapse below shows the progression of floodwater through the lake over the five-week period ending on May 6, 2024. Video: False-colour satellite images showing water flowing into Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre between April 1 and May 6, 2024. Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre is also an endorheic lake, meaning water flows into it but does not flow out towards the ocean. Water can only leave endorheic lakes through evaporation or percolation (water sinking into the ground). This flood event does not contain enough water to completely fill Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre and flows have already started diminishing in northern areas of the lake. Evaporation and percolation will gradually reduce the water level in Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre over the coming weeks, in the absence of any other significant inflows.

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Today, 2:37AM UTC

Eastern soaking underway with two months' rain in western NSW

Parts of Western NSW, Qld and Vic have seen double their average May rainfall in the last 24 hours, with rainfall set to continue Friday before focusing on the east on the weekend.  The rain is being generated by an upper level trough which is sitting over the region, which is expected to move east over the weekend.  These are the largest falls recorded during the 24 hours to 9am on Friday, May 10;  Noona in NSW observed 54mm, taking the monthly total to 89.8mm after 32mm fell during last week's event.  White Cliffs saw double the May monthly rainfall average in a day with 44m, the most daily rain in May in 43 years.  Broken Hill, NSW and Thargomindah, Qld also saw more than a month's worth of rain, with 23.8mm and 26.2mm falling respectively.  Mangalore airport, Vic recorded 41.4mm, making it the wettest May day in 24 years.  Wilcannia, NSW observed 39.8mm, its biggest daily May rainfall in 21 years  The opening nine days of May have been very wet for much of NSW and southeast Qld. Coastal NSW and far southeast Qld have picked up 100 to 200mm during May so far and inland areas of NSW have seen 25 to 100mm fall.  Image: Murray-Darling rainfall totals (mm) between the 1st and 9th of May 2024. Source: Bureau of Meteorology  The map below shows one model’s rain forecast over the next three days, with another round of wet weather forecast for several states and territories in the east. The highest totals and heaviest falls are forecast to occur in the Illawarra and South Coast regions over the weekend.    Image: Accumulated rainfall forecast for the 3 days leading up to 10pm AEST on Sunday, May 12, according to ECMWF.  The rain and thunderstorms will continue in south-central Qld, western NSW and north-central Vic on Friday, before shifting east on the weekend with the upper trough.   A low pressure system is expected to develop over the southeast coast on the weekend in response to the upper level trough moving eastward.  While large totals are expected along much of the coastal fringe in NSW and far southeast Qld, the heaviest falls are expected in the South Coast, Illawarra and the eastern Southern Tablelands. Daily rainfall totals of 70 to 100 mm are likely with isolated falls of 150 to 200 mm possible from Saturday into Sunday. The rainfall in these areas could be quite heavy, with six hourly totals of 70 to 90 mm, while some areas could pick up 120mm in six hours.  This rain will be falling on an already sodden landscape after last week's rainfall, which could increase the risk of flooding.  Looking ahead, the rain should ease during Sunday afternoon as the low moves east into the Tasman Sea. During the middle of next week, there should finally be some sunshine for the east as winds tend to the west ahead of a cold front. Please keep an eye out for the latest severe weather warnings here.    

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07 May 2024, 11:23PM UTC

How severe thunderstorms impact energy infrastructure

Earlier this year destructive thunderstorms and winds equivalent to a category two cyclone lashed Victoria, bending towers and toppling trees and poles.  So, how can thunderstorms damage energy infrastructure, and are these events getting worse?   This event occurred during mid-February 2024, when a strong cold front generated severe thunderstorms and localised wind gusts of 130km/h after a prolonged period of extreme heat. The image below shows a squall line around 1,500km long causing lightning across four states in February.  Image: Himawari-9 satellite image, lightning and radar on Tuesday, February 13 at 3pm AEDT.  The destructive winds were caused by microbursts, which bent towers and toppled trees and poles in Vic, leaving thousands without power.   Image: Damaged transmission towers at Anakie, Source: AAP  Microbursts are a localised column of sinking air (downdraft) within a thunderstorm and is usually less than 4km wide. The cold, heavy air within this downdraft descends rapidly to the surface and then spreads out in all directions as it hits the ground. The image below shows how wind gusts are produced in thunderstorms.    Microbursts can be destructive and cause wind gusts above 100 km/h, which can be a risk for power infrastructure. The force applied to the structure is roughly proportional to the speed squared.  Fierce wind gusts from thunderstorms can:  Knock down trees, which can fall onto power lines  Topple poles  Knock out transmission towers.  Microbursts typically occur during the warmer months of the year and, unfortunately, they can develop rapidly and last for only a short period of time, making them difficult to predict and warn communities about.   Have these thunderstorm events become more severe in Victoria?   The severe thunderstorm season across southern Australia occurs during the warmer months of the year, between November and April.   While thunderstorms are more common across northern Australia, Qld, and NSW, they do occur frequently in the summer months. The map below shows the annual average lightning density in Vic between July 2014 and June 2023, with the most lightning occurring in the northeast high country each year.      Image: Weatherzone’s Total Lightning Network Annual lightning density mean between July 2014 and June 2023.  You can see in the map above that lightning is common to the north of Ballarat near Learmonth and Miners Rest, with the region seeing 37.7 pulses per year. The high country near Benalla and Whitfield recorded an average of 28.1 pulses, Thorpdale in Gippsland saw 24.5 pulses, and Melbourne only 8.2 pulses per year.    Research has shown that the warming climate is increasing the risk of heatwaves and bushfires, which can impact energy infrastructure. Unfortunately, it is unknown how global warming will affect thunderstorms and their associated destructive winds. To research climate change's impact on thunderstorms, we would need quality data that dates back well into history. Unfortunately, detecting lightning is a fairly new phenomena, so a solid climate base to compare data to is not currently existent.   According to the University of Melbourne researchers and Watt Clarity, ‘The evidence we do have suggests continued climate change may potentially increase the risk of extreme winds from thunderstorms. This is partly due to more moist and unstable air, which are essential for thunderstorms to form. We think these conditions could occur more often with climate change, in part because warmer air can hold more moisture.’   Indeed, much of Australia had an unusually stormy summer 2023/24, with Melbourne, Canberra and Brisbane all seeing 5 to 6 extra storm days a season. The map below shows that an unusually high number of thunder days were seen over most of Qld, NSW, SA, Vic, the ACT and Tas during the summer of 2023/24 compared to the average of the most recent nine years.  Image: Thunder day anomalies for summer 2023-24 versus the average thunder days for the nation’s nine most recent summers (2014/15 to 2022/23). 

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23 Apr 2024, 12:07AM UTC

Wind returning to southeastern Australia

After a prolonged period of light winds, a surge of powerful winds and cool air will push through southeastern Australia during the next 48 hours.  As we wrote about last week the National Electricity Market (NEM) saw very low wind power generation during the seven days leading up to Thursday, April 18, with the daily wind generation having been under 41 GWh/day for this period.  Wind power has improved slightly during the past week, with wind power increasing for a few days over last weekend. The chart below shows that the winds across the NEM have already increased in response to a cold front approaching SA and Vic on Tuesday.  The increase in wind power is associated with a cold front sweeping across southeastern Australia, after a stubborn high-pressure system forced many cold fronts south for over a week.  The map below shows the cold front marching across the Bight, approaching SA on Tuesday morning. You can also see a broad area of speckled cloud in the Bight, which is a tell-tale sign that a large mass of cold polar air has broken away from the Antarctic region and is venturing into the relatively warm mid-latitudes.      Image: Himawari-9 satellite image at 9:30am AEST on Tuesday, April 23.  Northwesterly winds will continue to strengthen ahead of the cold front on Tuesday in SA and Vic before a strong southwesterly change hits Adelaide on Tuesday afternoon and Melbourne in the evening.   The images below show the wind gust forecast for Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon.      Image: Instantaneous wind gust forecast at 1pm AEST on Tuesday (top) (bottom)and Wednesday, April 23 and 24, according to ECMWF  While most of this wind should hit the wind power ‘sweet spot’, cut outs could occur at southeastern Vic and southern NSW wind farms late Tuesday into Wednesday. Generally, cut outs occur when wind speeds exceed 90km/h (25 m/s), which is when the wind turbines are turned off to prevent damage.  In the image above you can see the front and associated southerly change moving up the NSW coast on Wednesday, hitting Sydney on Wednesday afternoon.   Winds will then become light later this week as another high-pressure system moves into the Bight.   Cool change coming  Ahead of this change, much of southeastern Australia has experienced pleasant autumnal weather, with Sydney’s temperature for the next two days reaching 27°C. However, there will be a large temperature contrast ahead and behind the cold front in the next few days. The image below shows forecast air temperatures around 1.5km above sea level on Wednesday morning, showing the cool airmass moving over parts of SA, VIC, Tas.      Behind the cold front strong southwesterly winds will cause temperatures to plummet to around 2-3°C below average across southern Australia;  Melbourne and Adelaide's temperature dropping to around 16-18°C for several days following the front.   Hobart’s temperature will drop from 22°C on Tuesday to 15°C on Wednesday.   Sydney’s temperature will go from 5°C above average on Wednesday to average on Thursday.  The coolest air will move over Tas, bringing snow to the alpine region there.   Looking ahead, temperatures will recover later this week ahead of another cold front and burst of wind power early next week. 

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